Wild Hedgehog Mushrooms: Finding, Harvesting, and Cooking Tasty Forest FungisteemCreated with Sketch.

in #nature7 years ago

I confess, I eat hedgehogs. Hedgehog mushrooms, that is! Here are some tips for identifying, harvesting, and cooking two kinds of Hedgehogs that I look forward to finding every year.

xtsu DSC04610-1_WEB.jpg

Hedgehogs Are Great Mushrooms!

Hedgehog mushrooms (Hydenum spp.) are a great wild fungus for a novice mushroom forager. Why?

  • They don't have any dangerous look-alikes. Their few key features are distinctive.
  • If you find a patch of hedgehogs, chances are they will be in that same spot for years to come, unless there is a big disturbance of the soil or vegetation.
  • Insects don't bother them much. So there's no disappointment in discovering a great patch of mushrooms and then finding them all eaten up by slugs or maggots. And hedgehogs stand well in the woods without spoiling. They tend to dry up rather than rot.
  • Hedgehogs are easy to process for cooking. And they can keep for a week or more in the refrigerator and still be high quality.
  • And Hedgehog mushrooms taste really great! I think they are as good as chanterelles!

Last winter, I visited my parents in Arkansas. They have several areas on their 40 acres where two species of hedgehogs come up every year. But some sort of Hedgehog mushroom grows in many other parts of the world.


How to Know a Hedgehog Mushroom

Hedgehog mushrooms share their root system with some of the plants around them, in a symbiotic relationship that benefits both the hedgehog and its plant partner. That means that if you find a patch of hedgehogs, they are likely to be there every year, if the weather is right. Fall is time they usually pop up, but we found these in December.

Hedgehogs grow like a regular mushroom, with a stem that comes out of the ground. The top of hedgehogs aren't really round - they are more like a wavy, amoeba shape. The underside of the mushroom cap is unique. They have spiny teeth under their cap -- not gills, but little, brittle spines.

The Spreading Hedgehog

The most common hedgehog at my parents' place is Hydenum repandum, commonly called just the Hedgehog mushroom or the Spreading Hedgehog. H. repandum has tiny teeth that sometimes go a little ways down the stalk. The top of the cap is a basic white or beige. At my parents' place, they grow in stands of shortleaf pine (Pinus echinata), and are the biggest of their two kinds of hedgehogs.

H. repandum are easy to see and fun to pick, because usually there are quite a few in the same area. The trick is to keep the dirt and detritus on the base of their stems from getting into the spines of the cap. We handle them carefully and cut off the base before putting the hedgehogs in the baskets we use to carry them home.

tsu DSC04480-1_WEB.jpg

tsu DSC04476-1_WEB.jpg

The Terra Cotta Hedgehog

The Terra Cotta Hedgehog mushroom, Hydnum rufescens has some distinct differences from the Spreading Hedgehog. From the underside, you can its spines are more coarse. And they don't go down the stem, which is pretty much in the center of the mushroom. The top of the Terra Cotta Hedgehog is colored like its name, a brownish-red, and more rough-textured.

The Terra Cotta Hedgehogs are harder to pick, because they seem to be symbiotic with Common Greenbrier (Smilax rotundifolia) and Bull Greenbrier (S. bona-nox). So we have to scramble around in thick stands of long, intertwined vines with lots of thorns. But that's OK, because these colorful Hedgehogs are plentiful. It's worth the effort to bull into the brush!

xtsu DSC04612-1_WEB.jpg

xtsu DSC04610-1_WEB.jpg


How to Cook a Hedgehog Mushroom

Hedgehogs are easy to use in the kitchen - as long as you've picked clean, without getting dirt, pine needles, and other grit in those little spines. Because they grow in the forest duff, and are bug free, they are usually clean enough to use without washing.

This bowl has both kinds of Hedgehog mushrooms. Can you tell the Hydenum repandum laying on its side on the far left, from the H. rufescens with their stems pointing up?

The whole Hedgehog mushroom is good - the cap, the stem, and those spines. So getting them ready to cook is as easy as chopping them up. That's all there is to it.

tsu DSC04380 small_WEB.jpg

Like so many mushrooms, hedgehogs do need to be cooked - they shouldn't be eaten raw. And like so many mushrooms, they seem dry, but they really have a lot of moisture in them. That can be a good thing, if you use them in a stir-fry. Or it can be a problem, if you are are trying to fry them in oil - they will get slimy and who wants that?

The easiest thing to do is dry saute them. Just put them in a hot skillet and turn the heat down to medium. Don't put anything else in the skillet - no butter, no oil, no spices. The heat will bring out the liquid in the mushrooms. Then just watch them until the liquid is cooked off. The mushrooms will brown up and keep their firm texture.

The picture below gives you an idea of how much water was in those hedgehogs in the bowl. Once the mushroom liquid is cooked off, you can use them like any cooked mushrooms.

xtsu DSC04697-1_WEB.jpg

My mom used this batch of Hedgehog mushrooms in a basic cream gravy with wild chives. The traditional mushroom flavor of the Hedgehogs really comes through in a basic dish like this. It was perfect over a baked potato.

There are a couple other foraged foods on this plate, too. Over on the far left of the plate, are roasted American Chestnuts (Castanea dentata). They grow from a scrubby bush these days, rather than the giant trees wiped out decades ago by the Chestnut blight. And the meat is a gray squirrel(Sciurus carolinensis), one of my favorites! My mom knows how to cook! It's not farm to table - it's forest to table!

tsu DSC04698 small_WEB.jpg


Species List

  • Spreading Hedgehog Hydenum repandum
  • Terra Cotta Hedgehog Hydnum rufescens
  • American Chestnuts Castanea dentata
  • Gray Squirrel Sciurus carolinensis

What Do You Think?

I hope you get a chance to find some wild hedgehog mushrooms sometime!

  • Have you ever seen hedgehog mushrooms?
  • What are your thoughts on eating wild mushrooms?
  • Have you ever eaten hedgehog mushrooms?
  • Have you seen any wild mushrooms lately?

I write about foraging because I believe that we can all have lives that are richer, more secure, more grounded, and more interesting by getting to know the plants and the land around us – in our yards, our parks, and our wilderness.

I would like Steemit to be the premier site for Foraging on the Internet! If you have any thoughts about foraging, or experiences to share, write a post and be sure to use the Foraging tag. And check out the @foraging-trail to see curated quality posts about foraging. Happy Foraging!



** Haphazard Homestead **

Flag Gif.gif

*** foraging, gardening, nature, simple living close to the land ***

All content is 100% Haphazard Homestead!
My YouTube channel: Haphazard Homestead

Sort:  

These look delicious. I'm going on a hike this weekend and now I'm going to keep my eyes out for some hedgehog mushrooms. Thanks for a great homesteading article @haphazard-hstead.

Glad you enjoyed my hedgehog mushrooms, @bigpanda! These are a good mushroom to find on your homestead, because they come back in the same place every year. Happy mushroom hunting!

Oh they look devine, I love mushrooms of all sorts, but I am always too scared to forage them myself.

These hedgehogs are good mushrooms -- as good as anything in the stores or restaurants. Some mushrooms are pretty easy and reliable to identify. Hedgehogs are some of the easier ones to learn. Mushrooms are fun to find and enjoy, even if we don't eat them, though. Happy mushroom hunting!

Ooooo! I wonder if they grow in Tennessee.

I'm sure they do. I have found them in Arkansas, in the fall, regularly, when I visit my parents.

I have seen, collected and cooked hedgehog mushrooms in the last year in New Jersey. But, I did not find a lot of them. I love to eat wild mushrooms and Have recently eaten wild chanterelles and porcini in Colorado. I feel confident collecting hedgehog mushrooms because there are no poisonous look-alikes and it has the distinctive tooth pattern under the cap. Thanks for this post

Glad you enjoyed my hedgehog mushroom post. It's always fun to find something besides gills underneath a mushroom cap -- especially those hedgehog teeth.

And I'm glad you are enjoying some wild mushrooms in Colorado and New Jersey. It's amazing to think how much fungus there is out there, lol. Happy foraging!

This is nice because it is easy to identify them.

Yes, they are fun mushroom to find, too, because it's a surprise to find spines instead of gills, like most mushrooms.

I can only buy dried mushrooms like wood ear mushrooms from the supermarket and an occasional oyster mushrooms too if available. Both of which are so easy to identify too.

Those are both really good wild mushrooms! I'm glad you can get them at the supermarket. I like the wood ears in soup or eggs. And oyster mushrooms in so many ways. I have seem hedgehogs in our local small markets here in western Oregon, but not often. Enjoy your mushrooms!

Those are very pretty shrooms! Love the little spines they have.
Honestly I would never thing they are edible. Since I was very small we were picking just one or two types of wild growing mushrooms and I was simply avoiding all the rest since I don't know them well.
I probably saw them somewhere... but I just let them be :)

These hedgehogs are pretty much unmistakable. You would take a lot of nice photos of them once you notice their spines -- so then you would recognize them, easily. I hope you find some sometime!

I hope so :D And yea.. lots of photos is a must with a new find!

Second time this week I've gotten jealoud of someones wild mushroom foodstuffs - that gravy looks amazing!

Hedgehogs are a great starting mushroom if you're lucky anough to stumble upon them. I've only ever come across very old ones unfortunately. Resteemed straight away :)

Thanks, @dber! Hedgehogs are nice, too, because they grow in patches. Once we find the first one, we can always find more. That's a lot nicer than stumbling across one lonely bolete, lol. I hope you find some hedgehogs in good shape, sometime! And thanks for the Resteem, too!

I bet they would go good with some rice and soy sauce!

Oh yes -- they would go well with most anything -- especially whatever else is on my plate! ; ) They are good anywhere regular store mushrooms would be good.

I know these mushrooms. They are in my region. I have never eaten it ... however, they are not considered quality mushrooms! But they are beautiful ....

I know you appreciate the beauty of the mushrooms! With wild mushrooms, finding the right way to cook them is important to enjoy eating them. I haven't found an edible mushroom that didn't taste good, yet! But it does take getting to know their qualities. Happy mushroom hunting -- and photographing them! ; )

That my friend, was a very nice post.
I wanted to try some of that gravy.
Send gravy to: 455 NE steemmit st. 97256

haha -- I will tell my mom that you like her gravy! But maybe you will find some hedgehog mushrooms and then you can make it, too! :D

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.21
TRX 0.13
JST 0.030
BTC 66822.94
ETH 3490.23
USDT 1.00
SBD 2.90